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... acidity a bit, and they will die off. There may be exceptions and I'll be very happy if and when we discover space-faring bacteria, living inside asteroids. It's not the number of an organism at any point in time that matters though, it's how likely it is that it will still be around a million, ...

All materials will need to be transported from Earth, the Moon, the asteroids, comets, or other planets and their moons. Thus, the space colony designer may assume ample energy but must conserve materials. Therefore, the life support system of the colony should ...

... 'assume' that abiogenesis did happen - the only question then is 'how'. (Even if it happened extra-terrestrially and was transferred to Earth by asteroids etc etc, that doesn't explain how it first evolved 'de novo' somewhere in the universe at some point since the Big Bang') Mamoru - thank you ...

... kernels of Helium and other elementary particles, synthesize substance, and thus increase weight of a planet. Splinters of planets, comets and asteroids at falling on a star, mutually increase its weight and duration of a luminescence. It, certainly, contradicts formation of bodies by means ...

... which is what produces the CO2 you claimed. B. There is no claim that the materials produced by the big bang directly came together to produce asteroids, planets, or any other complex structure. C. There is no claim in Evolutionary Theory that random molecules assembled themselves into proteins, ...